Calgary Herald

Goodell denies Kaepernick blackballe­d over anthem

- BARNIE STAPLETON

NFL commission­er ENGLEWO O D , COLO. Roger Goodell says teams aren’t blackballi­ng Colin Kaepernick for kneeling during the national anthem last year.

“No, teams make decisions (based) on what’s in the best interest of their team and they make those decisions individual­ly,” Goodell said Thursday following his appearance at a forum with about 200 fans at the Denver Broncos’ indoor practice facility.

Kaepernick, who opted out of his contract with the 49ers on March 3, has drawn interest from Seattle and Baltimore but remains unemployed a year after throwing for 16 touchdowns and four intercepti­ons in 11 games. Several teams have signed lesser backups without giving Kaepernick a call.

Goodell demurred when asked if he thought Kaepernick should be in the league based strictly on his talent.

“There are other people who make those evaluation­s and that’s a decision that those teams all make individual­ly,” Goodell said.

“It’s not one that I would make as a commission­er.”

Kaepernick drew significan­t backlash last year after kneeling during the national anthem and saying he could not show pride in a flag of a country that he believes oppresses blacks and other minorities.

During the forum, one fan suggested Kaepernick’s prolonged protest was the reason for the decline in the NFL’s television ratings last year.

Goodell responded by saying TV ratings are down across sports and entertainm­ent because of changing viewership patterns and methods.

He also said he encourages players to be “active in their communitie­s because I think they are leaders in their communitie­s, I think they have a voice and they should express it. And I think it’s important for them to do it responsibl­y.”

Goodell used Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall as a good example.

Marshall, who was a teammate of Kaepernick’s at Nevada, knelt for seven games then ended his protest after Denver police changed their use-of-force policy. On other topics, Goodell said: Just like the public’s view of gambling has evolved, so, too, has its view of marijuana to fight pain but the issue is a medical one.

“We’ve just proposed to our union in the last month or so that we’ll put some research money behind that to see how we can implement that if there really is these kind of advancemen­ts and it can address pain management in an effective and safe fashion,” Goodell said.

He doesn’t believe the restrictio­ns on padded practices during training camp and the regular season have eroded the overall quality of play.

“No, I don’t. You know you look at these guys,” he said, pointing to Von Miller and Emmanuel Sanders seated beside him.

“It used to be decades ago that we used to have six pre-season games. Training camp was 10 or 12 weeks, double sessions every day. These guys take care of themselves every day. They’re never out of shape and I think that comes with their profession­al approach to the game.

“And from my standpoint, the rules have been very healthy. Coaches like to coach, right? But every team has the same rules. Every team has the same restrictio­ns, the same limitation­s and they have learned to coach them quicker, they’ve learned to coach them more efficientl­y.”

He doubts the government will get involved and try to regulate football like it does boxing after a recent study showed that more than 100 former NFL players had chronic traumatic encephalop­athy.

The brain disease can cause memory loss, depression, violent mood swings and other cognitive and behavioura­l issues in those exposed to repetitive head trauma.

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